Local THE BATTALION MONDAY, OCTOBER 12. 1981 Page 3 Smoke, steam set off fire alarms on campus H’Stb eersto nth I, ised li now hts as :hev BICjj ichrolii vawti Bonfire barbecue Staff photo by Dave Einsel By LISA SURMAN Battalion Reporter Activated fire alarms are com mon at Texas A&M University, but they are not always the result of fires. University Police Officer Cameron Moore says. Of 759 alarm responses last year, only nine were actually caused by fires. Police Chief Russ McDonald said. In spite of this, officers “must respond to every alarm as if it’s the actual thing,” he said. “We answer two or three calls a day like this,” Moore said. “We answer these calls to keep the fire station from having to come on campus all of the time.” He said the alarms may sound because of cigarette smoke, clean ing solvents or even steam from a shower. The sensor heads on an alarm may get “so sensitive they actually set each other off,” Moore said. A spokeswoman from the elec tronics shop of the University Physical Plant said an alarm may set itself off because of too much radioactive material in the air. But this “can be helped by a simple adjustment,” she said. Any time a system is put in a new building, there is a lot of dust in the air which gets into the re turn air vents, she said. The spokeswoman said each building on campus has a trans mitter in the ceiling of its main office which sends out a code. The code is picked up by a computer in the radio room at the Physical Plant, she said. Moore said the computer puts out a number which tells where the alarm has sounded. He said a new computer system was instal led at the Physical Plant to process the incoming information. One of the most recent false alarms was Oct. 4 in Underwood Hall, the new modular dormitory located in the Commons Area. Meredith Ross, Underwood head resident, said an alarm on the first floor sounded but no switches which activate the alarm were pulled. Duke Bonilla, chairman of the Bonfire Committee, looks on as H. B. Zachry speaks with Texas A&M University President Frank E. Vandiver and Assistant to the Presi dent Malon Southerland at the barbecue held Saturday at the Grove to benefit bonfire construction. More than 1,600 people attended the barbecue . Procedures set for complaints By JOYCE HALLBAUER Battalion Reporter If a faculty member has a com plaint concerning official actions such as dismissal, tenure, salary or academic course assignments, Texas A&.M University has a spe cific grievance procedure to follow. The faculty member should talk to his department head first, Clin ton Phillips, dean of faculties, said. Ifhecould not settle it with his department head, then he could appeal to his dean and through the system to the vice president for academic affairs, Phillips said. After Vice President for Acade mic Affairs J.M. Prescott is con sulted, the final decision is left up to University President Frank E. Vandiver. The basic policies and proce dures are outlined in a manual on academic freedom, responsibility and tenure published in 1979, Phillips said. Tenured faculty can appeal a decision for dismissal to an advisory committee, which is elected by faculty, but a non- tenured member cannot, he said. A hearing may then be recom mended and the decision will be sent to the Committee on Acade mic Freedom, Responsibility and Tenure, which sends its recom mendation to the Texas A&M Sys tem Board of Regents for review and a final decision, Phillips said. In the case* of faculty being de nied tenure, there are many fac tors involved, and the normal pro cedure is followed, Phillips said. “Contrary to what a lot of stu dents may think, inadequate teaching may be just as important a reason for not granting tenure,” he said, as lack of research. Ser vice function involvement and student advisement are also consi dered. Faculty may also have com plaints about salaries, which are increased yearly by cost of living and merit raises. Recommenda tions of deans are reviewed for in dividual faculty salary increases, he said. When faculty feel they are not given the courses they are most capable of teaching, or have hours they feel are unfair, they may file a grievance to have these changed, Phillips said. Watch for Our Eng 10th Annual Odds $ Ends Sale - Coming- Oct. 14-17 ci Vests Goose Down $ Thinsulate "If! to&t> 39°- S£2 Will be mafivj styles and colors _ for women 4 men Our bigqest sale of the year, with fanta$>t\c?>uys in every department WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 105 Boyett 846-8794 TENANTS, ANYONE? Get all the protection you need — at low cost — with Farmers Te nants Package Policy. Protects your precious possessions at home or anywhere in the world. Give your fast, fair, friendly Farm ers man a ring TODAY. Ron Allen Agency 707 Texas Avenue Suite 110~A 696-9351 Our policy is saving you money. 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